Chad Public Expenditure Analysis : Fiscal Space for Productive Social Sectors Expenditure

The objective of the Chad Public Expenditure Analysis (PEA) is to examine the technical efficiency and effectiveness of public expenditure, thereby creating fiscal space for more social sector spending. With continued pressures to rationalize expen...

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Main Authors: Kitzmuller, Markus, Kassim, Olanrewaju
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/975461601446002883/Chad-Public-Expenditure-Analysis-Fiscal-Space-for-Productive-Social-Sectors-Expenditure
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/34616
id okr-10986-34616
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-346162021-05-25T09:58:41Z Chad Public Expenditure Analysis : Fiscal Space for Productive Social Sectors Expenditure Kitzmuller, Markus Kassim, Olanrewaju FISCAL TRENDS PUBLIC EXPENDITURE EDUCATION SPENDING PUBLIC HEALTH EXPENDITURE FISCAL REVENUE EDUCATION EXPENDITURE PUBLIC HEALTH SYSTEM HEALTH FINANCING EQUITY MORTALITY The objective of the Chad Public Expenditure Analysis (PEA) is to examine the technical efficiency and effectiveness of public expenditure, thereby creating fiscal space for more social sector spending. With continued pressures to rationalize expenditure, the government of Chad is interested in finding options to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of public spending, especially in the education and health sectors. In addition, Chad needs to urgently develop structural growth drivers which makes adequate social sector expenditure a priority. Therefore, this PEA explores options to improve (non-oil) revenue mobilization and channel oil revenues towards these social sectors. Finally, a series of policy recommendations is derived from analysis. The PEA is organized around four chapters: chapter one presents short term fiscal developments, long term trends and a medium term macro-fiscal framework. Chapter two serves as an overview and presents detailed analyses of domestic revenues and central government expenditures. Chapter three focuses on the education sector by: (i) analyzing trends and composition of education spending; (ii) examining efficiency in the management and utilization of resources; and (iii) evaluating technical efficiency. Chapter four provides a description of public spending bottlenecks in the health sector while examining resource and expenditure patterns with a focus on technical efficiency and equity of public health spending. 2020-10-14T13:50:56Z 2020-10-14T13:50:56Z 2019-06 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/975461601446002883/Chad-Public-Expenditure-Analysis-Fiscal-Space-for-Productive-Social-Sectors-Expenditure http://hdl.handle.net/10986/34616 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work Economic & Sector Work :: Public Expenditure Review Africa Chad
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic FISCAL TRENDS
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
EDUCATION SPENDING
PUBLIC HEALTH EXPENDITURE
FISCAL REVENUE
EDUCATION EXPENDITURE
PUBLIC HEALTH SYSTEM
HEALTH FINANCING
EQUITY
MORTALITY
spellingShingle FISCAL TRENDS
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
EDUCATION SPENDING
PUBLIC HEALTH EXPENDITURE
FISCAL REVENUE
EDUCATION EXPENDITURE
PUBLIC HEALTH SYSTEM
HEALTH FINANCING
EQUITY
MORTALITY
Kitzmuller, Markus
Kassim, Olanrewaju
Chad Public Expenditure Analysis : Fiscal Space for Productive Social Sectors Expenditure
geographic_facet Africa
Chad
description The objective of the Chad Public Expenditure Analysis (PEA) is to examine the technical efficiency and effectiveness of public expenditure, thereby creating fiscal space for more social sector spending. With continued pressures to rationalize expenditure, the government of Chad is interested in finding options to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of public spending, especially in the education and health sectors. In addition, Chad needs to urgently develop structural growth drivers which makes adequate social sector expenditure a priority. Therefore, this PEA explores options to improve (non-oil) revenue mobilization and channel oil revenues towards these social sectors. Finally, a series of policy recommendations is derived from analysis. The PEA is organized around four chapters: chapter one presents short term fiscal developments, long term trends and a medium term macro-fiscal framework. Chapter two serves as an overview and presents detailed analyses of domestic revenues and central government expenditures. Chapter three focuses on the education sector by: (i) analyzing trends and composition of education spending; (ii) examining efficiency in the management and utilization of resources; and (iii) evaluating technical efficiency. Chapter four provides a description of public spending bottlenecks in the health sector while examining resource and expenditure patterns with a focus on technical efficiency and equity of public health spending.
format Report
author Kitzmuller, Markus
Kassim, Olanrewaju
author_facet Kitzmuller, Markus
Kassim, Olanrewaju
author_sort Kitzmuller, Markus
title Chad Public Expenditure Analysis : Fiscal Space for Productive Social Sectors Expenditure
title_short Chad Public Expenditure Analysis : Fiscal Space for Productive Social Sectors Expenditure
title_full Chad Public Expenditure Analysis : Fiscal Space for Productive Social Sectors Expenditure
title_fullStr Chad Public Expenditure Analysis : Fiscal Space for Productive Social Sectors Expenditure
title_full_unstemmed Chad Public Expenditure Analysis : Fiscal Space for Productive Social Sectors Expenditure
title_sort chad public expenditure analysis : fiscal space for productive social sectors expenditure
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2020
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/975461601446002883/Chad-Public-Expenditure-Analysis-Fiscal-Space-for-Productive-Social-Sectors-Expenditure
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/34616
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